Tag: UK

APC Overnight wins contract for next day delivery in the UK

APC Overnight has won a contract with the world’s second-largest container shipping company, Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), for time-definite next day delivery in the UK.

APC was chosen from a number of carriers for the contract with Ipswich-based MSC involving the provision of time-definite next day delivery of important shipping documents (Bills of Lading). MSC sends hundreds of these documents every week to companies around the UK.

MSC has an APC Overnight implant system allowing orders to be entered and labels produced in house ready for collection, with deliveries being guaranteed by noon the next day. According to MSC, APC Overnight’s online tracking provides added assurance that documents have been received safely.

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Privatisation fever grips La Poste and Deutsche Bahn

There’s a new whiff of privatisation in the air. Two of mainland Europe’s biggest state-owned utilities, La Poste in France and Deutsche Bahn in Germany, have signalled they are planning for an injection of private capital as they gear up for liberalisation of EU markets in the post and on the railways.
The postal market is due to be fully competitive from 2011 while the rail market will pre-date it by two years. But the two behemoths are already planning their transformation, with DB’s Hartmut Mehdorn, its chief executive, saying its float of 24.9 pct of its transport, logistics and services arm will take place in late October. This could raise EUR 5bn in one of Europe’s biggest most recent IPOs.
The more extraordinary of the two operations is that of La Poste. Throughout the tortuous negotiations among EU institutions over postal liberalisation, originally slated for 2009, the French operator was among the fiercest critics of full-scale competition – unlike the British, Germans and Swedes. But Jean-Paul Bailly, its chairman, has had a Damascene conversion.
He now wants to raise up to EUR 3bn to help finance La Poste’s European expansion and to get the legal process in place so that the public enterprise, changed into a SA (PLC), can open up its capital as early as 2011. Rather than attract pension funds, Bailly apparently wants to raise capital via the stockmarket. The state, probably in the form of its investment arm, the CDC, could play a restricted role and the 400,000 current and retired employees would be reserved their share. But the target is institutional and retail investors.
The British group, in its submission to the independent (Hooper) review of the postal market, complains repeatedly of its limited equity capital as its struggles to deal with losses in its declining universal, six-day letters service and what it claims is a GBP 2.6bn cash gap caused by price controls. Its regulator, Postcomm, openly favours the injection of private capital and private sector partnerships to enable a “more rapid transformation” and make it more efficient and profitable.
But it’s far from clear how this would be achieved and experts believe that private capital will only be available if Royal Mail is broken up, with profitable parts of its business like Parcelforce sold off. Meanwhile, the Greeks and Estonians are thinking of privatising their postal operator. The Danes and Swedes are getting together, with the Danish state, postal employees and private equity group CVC owning 40% and the Swedish state and employees of Posten owning the other 60% of the combined operation.
Unless the Hooper report comes up with some radical proposals and this or the next government is ready to bite the bullet, the Brits, the privatisation pioneers, are in danger of being left behind in the EU – again.

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Royal Mail unveils modern and stylish new uniform

Royal Mail has unveiled a stylish and up to date new uniform to take the company proudly into its next phase of modernisation.

Designed in collaboration with postmen and women, the uniform is practical and contemporary. Not only will it allow postmen and women to carry out their duties in comfort, its practical qualities will also benefit customers with a specific aspect of the design tailored for Royal Mail’s new customer-focussed technology.

The new uniform design reflects a wide range of roles within Royal Mail. Items in the range include polo shirts, fleece tops, and summer hats, as well as cycle helmets. Also included are light-weight cagoules and all-weather jackets to protect Royal Mail delivery staff both from the elements and the challenges of the modern delivery round.

And the new trousers have specially designed pockets to hold new handheld computers – this week being rolled out to 33,000 postmen and women to provide customers with real time proof of delivery of tracked products, including Royal Mail’s Special Delivery services.

The changes have proved popular with Royal Mail employees; 81 per cent of postmen and women who trialled the new uniforms said they felt proud wearing them.

Post men and women in Brighton and Redhill are currently trialling the new uniforms. They will be introduced more widely across the organisation during 2009.

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FedEx scrapping four flights a week from Manchester to US

FedEx is cutting services from Manchester Airport just a year after its widely-publicised introduction.

Four direct flights a week between FedEx’s super hub in Memphis and Manchester on a wide-bodied Boeing MD 11 aircraft are to be scrapped and replaced with feeder flights to Stansted on a much smaller ATR 72 aircraft.

Last year, the company took out advertisements at poster sites and in the business press with the strapline “From the M66 to Route 66 by 10.30 next day”, but the changes to the service mean that businesses in Manchester will no longer benefit from next-day deliveries of larger freight goods to the US.

Services for smaller packages, under 68 kilos, will not be affected by the changes but some customers in the Manchester area may have earlier cut off times to deliver their packages to FedEx depots.

FedEx said none of its 84 employees in Greater Manchester would be losing their jobs as a result of the shake-up, but two workers at the airport were being relocated to the Manchester depot.

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